At some point you have to put trust in your child not just therapists and trusts. I guess if the child really wants to self destruct you have bigger problems than blowing through 100k. |
I'm finding it helpful to assume the "just let him have the money right away" responses are from a bored teenager. |
Do 16-year-olds just inherit without parents being involved? |
If you teenager is underage, the money should be placed in an account for the child with someone else having control over the account. You should petition to be appointed as guardian of the child's estate until they turn 18 and then take care of the money as appropriate. Anything you do will need approval from the Court, but it's much better than just handing $100,000 to a teenager. It's going to affect their college admission financial aid, so you will want to get some advice about how to best handle that. The court might approve a trust until they're 25 in order to ensure that they have appropriate financial aid for college. |
I will gently suggest that you sound like a parent pushing the child into too many activities and are overbearing.
Let your kid drop out of all non-school activities, don't buy your child a car, and do not engage in controlling behavior. This has not worked well for many parents I know. All have ended up with adult kids moving far away from their parents, and kids end up being adults and potheads and rebel, rebelling all the time, saying this is what they want to do. It is not easy to do, but have your kid fail school. It will teach your child so much more than hiring tutors and throwing tantrums yourself. You might not be doing this, but it sounds like you might be doing it. The next thing you know is you are having a drop out of everything child. Your child is not doing drugs that you know of. Stop controlling your child as you are trying to control your relative. You are doing more harm in the long run. This has no bearing on the money; you should do as you think is right for any money until the child is 18. |
Can you just put in it a high yield savings account under your DC’s name and just not tell him it’s there and let him know in ten years,? I don’t know laws about informing post inheritance though. Maybe you write a letter and DC doesn’t read it! |
So you think it would be better for this child to qualify for financial aid as opposed to using the 100K to pay for college? |
This. |
This. This is a small sum of money as these things go. Honestly it would allow the kid to buy a car. I would not do a trust for 100k. The fees will be way too high. |
Yes, and the OP seems to understand her own kid extremely well. When you have a kid in therapy, most parents have a much greater understanding of their kids issues, strong points and weaknesses and how they function best. You obviously have never had a neuro-divergent kid or one that isn't highly motivated. The mom obviously realizes her kid has some issues, that is why she is working hard to ensure this does NOT make the situation worse. She also has them in therapy to help rectify the situation and to give her kid the best chance at a "normal life". Intervention at a younger age is much better than the "lets wait and see and just toss them into life and expect them to be like everyone else". Congrats to you for having perfect kids. |
The relative has told you he does not want to make changes and he does not want to be hassled. Don't hassle the relative or you might get "0". This would allow your son to have a paid for car and paid for car insurance. This is a pretty small sum of money. I absolutely would not hassle the relative. Spend your time between now and death educating your son on money. |
If your son does not go to college let him use it for trade school.
Get your kid a car so he can drive to trade school and his job. This is the intent of the relative. Don't hassle the old guy. |
If your kid just has anxiety and doesn’t want to do school, I wouldn’t worry about it that much. That tells me they’d probably just spend through the money and end up in about the same place. And maybe they’d learn something! Or put a big chunk in a retirement account, or something.
Ultimately if your kid is struggling this doesn’t seem like the scariest challenge to me. |
After uncle passes verbally tell your son it is for college, trade school and a car.
Uncle could live another 10 years or more. |
Let them do what they want with the money and I agree grades don’t matter graduating doesn’t either |